BACKGROUND: Patient-reported adverse events may be a useful adjunct for assessing a drug's tolerability in dose-finding oncology trials (DFOT). We conducted surveys of international stakeholders and the National Cancer Research Institute (NCRI) Consumer Forum to understand attitudes about patient-reported outcome (PRO) use in DFOT. METHODS: A 35-question survey of clinicians, trial managers, statisticians, funders, and regulators of DFOT was distributed via professional bodies examining experience using PROs, benefits/barriers, and their potential role in defining tolerable doses. An 8-question survey of the NCRI Consumer Forum explored similar themes. RESULTS: International survey: 112 responses from 15 September-30 November 2020; 103 tria...
Purpose: We conducted a secondary qualitative analysis of consultations between oncologists and thei...
ABSTRACT Background Patient‐reported adverse events (AEs) may be a useful adjunct to clinician‐asses...
Background There exists scant evidence on the optimal approaches to integrating patient-reported out...
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported adverse events may be a useful adjunct for assessing a drug's tolerabil...
BACKGROUND: Traditionally, within dose-finding clinical trials, treatment toxicity and tolerability ...
There is increasing interest in collecting patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in oncology drug develop...
Objectives: In our systematic review, we assessed past and current practice of patient-reported outc...
Background: There exists scant evidence on the optimal approaches to integrating patient-reported ou...
Methodological issues may limit the impact and application of patient-reported outcome (PRO) evidenc...
BACKGROUND: Despite evidence of the positive impact of routine assessment of patient-reported outcom...
International audienceBackground: In the era of personalized medicine, molecularly targeted therapie...
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is developing a patient-reported version of its Common Terminolo...
PurposeEvidence suggests patient-reported outcome (PRO) content of cancer trial protocols is frequen...
Introduction: Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are increasingly included within cancer clinical tria...
BackgroundThere exists scant evidence on the optimal approaches to integrating patient-reported outc...
Purpose: We conducted a secondary qualitative analysis of consultations between oncologists and thei...
ABSTRACT Background Patient‐reported adverse events (AEs) may be a useful adjunct to clinician‐asses...
Background There exists scant evidence on the optimal approaches to integrating patient-reported out...
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported adverse events may be a useful adjunct for assessing a drug's tolerabil...
BACKGROUND: Traditionally, within dose-finding clinical trials, treatment toxicity and tolerability ...
There is increasing interest in collecting patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in oncology drug develop...
Objectives: In our systematic review, we assessed past and current practice of patient-reported outc...
Background: There exists scant evidence on the optimal approaches to integrating patient-reported ou...
Methodological issues may limit the impact and application of patient-reported outcome (PRO) evidenc...
BACKGROUND: Despite evidence of the positive impact of routine assessment of patient-reported outcom...
International audienceBackground: In the era of personalized medicine, molecularly targeted therapie...
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is developing a patient-reported version of its Common Terminolo...
PurposeEvidence suggests patient-reported outcome (PRO) content of cancer trial protocols is frequen...
Introduction: Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are increasingly included within cancer clinical tria...
BackgroundThere exists scant evidence on the optimal approaches to integrating patient-reported outc...
Purpose: We conducted a secondary qualitative analysis of consultations between oncologists and thei...
ABSTRACT Background Patient‐reported adverse events (AEs) may be a useful adjunct to clinician‐asses...
Background There exists scant evidence on the optimal approaches to integrating patient-reported out...